Alphane Moon@lemmy.worldM to Hardware@lemmy.worldEnglish · 19 days agoSeagate's HAMR HDDs qualified by customers — volume shipments imminentwww.tomshardware.comexternal-linkmessage-square3fedilinkarrow-up18arrow-down10cross-posted to: datahoarder@lemmit.online
arrow-up18arrow-down1external-linkSeagate's HAMR HDDs qualified by customers — volume shipments imminentwww.tomshardware.comAlphane Moon@lemmy.worldM to Hardware@lemmy.worldEnglish · 19 days agomessage-square3fedilinkcross-posted to: datahoarder@lemmit.online
minus-squareAlphane Moon@lemmy.worldOPMlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·19 days agoI wonder if these 30TB+ drives will ever come to the consumer realm. I have a feeling that NAS-scale consumer SSD arrays will likely be a better option in the medium to long term.
minus-squarecmnybo@discuss.tchncs.delinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3·19 days ago24TB drives are readily available now. You can even get recertified ones fairly cheaply. I’m sure 30TB drives will be common soon. I don’t expect large SSDs to catch up to the price of HDDs anytime soon though.
minus-squareAlphane Moon@lemmy.worldOPMlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3·19 days agoI still use HDDs for mass/archival storage and will continue to do so, but I do think in 5-10 years SSD $/TB will be catch up to HDD (or come close enough where more and more people will choose SSDs). We’ll found out in 5-10 years. 😀
I wonder if these 30TB+ drives will ever come to the consumer realm.
I have a feeling that NAS-scale consumer SSD arrays will likely be a better option in the medium to long term.
24TB drives are readily available now. You can even get recertified ones fairly cheaply. I’m sure 30TB drives will be common soon.
I don’t expect large SSDs to catch up to the price of HDDs anytime soon though.
I still use HDDs for mass/archival storage and will continue to do so, but I do think in 5-10 years SSD $/TB will be catch up to HDD (or come close enough where more and more people will choose SSDs).
We’ll found out in 5-10 years. 😀